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Scottish ministers criticised for slow progress in exam passes for poorer students

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Ministers in Scotland are facing intense criticism over a sluggish increase in exam passes by teenagers from deprived areas after repeated promises to greatly improve performance.Opposition parties and Scotland’s largest teaching union said progress in closing the attainment gap – the difference between exam passes for pupils from the wealthiest areas and those from the most deprived – was too slow and too patchy.In 2016, Nicola Sturgeon, then the first minister, published her government’s legislative programme with the promise that “substantially eliminating” the attainment gap by 2026 would be her government’s “defining mission”.This year’s exam results showed that the attainment gap had closed slightly year on year for pupils sitting National 5s, the Scottish equivalent to GCSEs, falling from 17.2 percentage points last year to 16.

5 points this year,For Scottish Highers, the standard qualification for university applications and roughly equivalent to A-levels, the gap this year fell marginally to 17,1 points from 17,2 points in 2024, then the highest on record,Scottish Labour said education was stagnating under the Scottish National party.

Data from the Scottish Qualifications Authority showed this year’s attainment gap was very similar to that of 2019, the year before the Covid crisis hit, when the gap for National 5s was 17 points.Pam Duncan-Glancy, Scottish Labour’s education spokesperson, accused Jenny Gilruth, the education secretary, of deflecting questions about the failure to meet its target when she was questioned on BBC Radio Scotland on Tuesday morning.“It is damning that Jenny Gilruth cannot say whether the attainment gap will be closed by next year,” Duncan-Glancy said.“This once again proves that any promises made by the SNP are simply not worth the paper they are written on.”Gilruth said they were measuring progress against literacy and numeracy levels in schools, and on improving access to university, not on exam passes.

On both counts, attainment was improving, she said.The universities clearing house, Ucas, said on Tuesday a record number of Scots from the most deprived areas had won university places, up by 5.5 points year on year to 2,060 people.However, only 16% of the 18-year-olds given places were from the poorest areas, compared with 43.6% from the most advantaged.

Gilruth said the Covid crisis and Scotland’s funding levels from the UK government were significant factors.“I’m absolutely committed to our continued work to close the attainment gap, but I am in no way shirking away from the challenge we’ve seen in terms of the Covid pandemic and austerity in our schools,” she said.Thousands of pupils across the Western Isles, Arran, Orkney and Shetland received their results late after Monday’s severe storm delayed postal deliveries.The overall results showed pass rates for National 5s and Highers had increased beyond the rate in 2019, with A-grade passes at their highest level.Andrea Bradley, the general secretary of the EIS teaching union, said “further solid steps” were needed to tackle poverty.

“If Scotland is to eradicate the poverty-related attainment gap and deliver an education system that truly and equitably meets the diverse needs of all learners, then greater investment in schools and colleges, in resources and in teaching and support staff is essential,” she said.
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OpenAI takes on Meta and DeepSeek with free and customisable AI models

OpenAI is taking on Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta and Chinese rival DeepSeek by launching its own freely available artificial intelligence models.The ChatGPT developer has announced two “open weight” large language models, which are free to download and can be customised by developers.Meta’s Llama models are available on a similar basis, and OpenAI’s move marks a departure from ChatGPT, which is based on a “closed” model that cannot be customised.Sam Altman, OpenAI’s chief executive, said the company was excited to add to a stack of freely available AI models “based on democratic values … and for wide benefit”.He added: “We’re excited to make this model, the result of billions of dollars of research, available to the world to get AI into the hands of the most people possible

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Tech’s trillion-dollar binge, Palantir’s empire and women’s privacy under attack

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. This week, tech companies are spending amounts of money that stretch the limits of the imagination. Donald Trump’s administration is spending more money with data analytics and surveillance firm Palantir. And women on both sides of the Pacific face the extreme difficulty of keeping intimate moments private online.In last week’s edition of the newsletter, my colleagues wrote about the upshot of Google’s earnings call: lots of money earned, but, more importantly lots of money spent on AI

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Tesla shareholders sue Elon Musk for allegedly hyping up faltering Robotaxi

Tesla shareholders sued Elon Musk and the electric vehicle maker for allegedly concealing the significant risk posed by company’s self-driving vehicles.The proposed class-action suit, which accuses Musk and Tesla of securities fraud, was filed on Monday night. Tesla conducted its first public test of its self-driving taxis in late June near the company’s headquarters in Austin, Texas. That test showed the vehicles speeding, braking suddenly, driving over a curb, entering the wrong lane and dropping off passengers in the middle of multilane roads. The National Highway Transit Safety Administration (NHTSA), the main transportation regulator in the US, is investigating the Robotaxi’s pilot test

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The dark side of cryptocurrency

Andrew Bailey is right to distance the British financial system from cryptocurrency, but he is being too polite about it (Editorial, 29 July). Cryptocurrency is evil. Being speculative in nature, it serves no purpose as a useful currency, and being secretive, it facilitates international drug dealing, people trafficking and terrorism. In addition to helping destabilise our precarious world, it has a huge, unnecessary carbon footprint. It’s time for our financial authorities to speak truth to money

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OpenAI stops ChatGPT from telling people to break up with partners

ChatGPT will not tell people to break up with their partner and will encourage users to take breaks from long chatbot sessions, under new changes to the artificial intelligence tool.OpenAI, ChatGPT’s developer, said the chatbot would stop giving definitive answers to personal challenges and would instead help people to mull over problems such as potential breakups.“When you ask something like: ‘Should I break up with my boyfriend?’ ChatGPT shouldn’t give you an answer. It should help you think it through – asking questions, weighing pros and cons,” said OpenAI.The US company said new ChatGPT behaviour for dealing with “high-stakes personal decisions” would be rolled out soon

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‘We didn’t vote for ChatGPT’: Swedish PM under fire for using AI in role

The Swedish prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, has come under fire after admitting that he regularly consults AI tools for a second opinion in his role running the country.Kristersson, whose Moderate party leads Sweden’s centre-right coalition government, said he used tools including ChatGPT and the French service LeChat. His colleagues also used AI in their daily work, he said.Kristersson told the Swedish business newspaper Dagens industri: “I use it myself quite often. If for nothing else than for a second opinion

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